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World / Americas

Bolivia ruling party backs Morales for fourth term

Published: 18 Dec 2016 - 11:34 pm | Last Updated: 01 Nov 2021 - 07:08 pm

AFP

La Paz: Bolivia’s ruling socialist party yesterday defied the results of a February referendum and backed President Evo Morales for a fourth term in 2019. The Movement for Socialism (MAS) party, holding a congress in eastern city of Montero, approved candidacy of Morales—Bolivia’s first president with an indigenous background—in a unanimous vote.
Morales welcomed party’s decision, saying, “If the people decide it, Evo will continue.”  He added: “So many times we have defeated the right.”
Morales was first elected president in 2005, and re-elected in 2009 and 2014.
But he narrowly lost the referendum in February on the question of whether the constitution should be revised to permit him to run again in 2019. His current term expires on January 22, 2020.
The party congress recommended “four legal alternatives” to allow his candidacy within constitutional framework, according to a union leader who read the conclusions.
The first was a partial constitutional reform through an initiative requiring the signatures of some 20 percent of the electorate. Another also involves a constitutional reform to allow an extended presidential mandate.
The third recommends that the president renounce his office before the 2019 elections, so that he would not have served three full terms, while the fourth involves a reinterpretation of the constitution.
Morales, who has cultivated an “everyman” image, has been highly popular throughout most of his presidency.
He won his first election with 54 percent of the vote, his second with 64 percent and his third with 61 percent.
Morales has generally benefited from a fragmented opposition. At the time of February referendum, his popularity had been damaged by allegations that he had fathered a child with a young woman, Gabriela Zapata, and done favours for Chinese company employing her.
He admitted the two had had a son, who died in infancy, but denied the other allegations. Still, he lost the referendum by a narrow margin, 51 percent to 49 percent, and vowed to continue pressing the leftist platform that underlies his popularity.